
The barrow only just visible through the scrub. Taken standing in the ditch.
The barrow only just visible through the scrub. Taken standing in the ditch.
The SW entrance with Salisbury Cathedral in the distance.
Showing the wide berm between the outer bank and the inner ditch.
The SE Entrance.
The Tor in its wider landscape. From Ebbor Gorge, about 6 1/2 Miles N.
The Tor in its wider landscape. From the Old Wells Road, about 6 Miles NE.
Looking NW with Hants on Right, Dorset on Left over bank and Wilts by trees in background.
Squinting round the side of one of the barrows with the lake just visible in the background.
The little cricket pitch with at least six barrows on its boundary.
The marks were once thought to be the signs of the stone being used to polish tools but are more likely to be natural.
The landscape towards The Sanctuary and W. Overton Church.
A curious little survivor in suburban Winchester.
The original entrance was the little kink at the top of the arch, the rest has been excavated.
Eat your heart out Van Gogh!
The trees define the ditches and banks on the N side.
Impressive in its setting but the actual site was, to me, disappointing.
Situated on the edge of the village square with a good pub of the same name which has a few pictures of the annual turning ceremony.
Is that a ginger familiar in the background?
Quite a lean on it, but if the folklore is to be believed, teams of horses couldn’t pull it upright.
Close up of W face. If you squint, is there a circle around the cross?
After they had finished the excavations and restoration. The supporting structures remained until the concrete set.